Home Secretary Sajid Javid To Meet Police Chiefs In Effort To Combat 'Senseless Violence'

A 17-year-old girl and a 17-year-old-boy were stabbed to death in separate incidents this weekend.
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Home Secretary Sajid Javid will meet police chief constables this week to discuss strategies for tackling “senseless violence” blighting the UK.

It follows a weekend of violence across the UK that saw a 17-year-old girl and a 17-year-old-boy stabbed to death in separate incidents.

Javid said: “Young people are being murdered across the country and it can’t go on.

“We’re taking action on many fronts and I’ll be meeting police chiefs this week to hear what more can be done.

“It is vital that we unite to stop this senseless violence.”

On Saturday, Yousef Ghaleb Makki, 17, was killed in Hale Barns in Greater Manchester a day after a 17-year-old girl, Jodie Chesney, was killed in a knife attack in a London park.

Jodie was the 18th homicide in the capital in 2019, a total that now stands at 20.

Jodie Chesney
Jodie Chesney

Their deaths follow three teenagers dying in knife attacks in two weeks in Birmingham, leading to West Midlands Police and Crime Commissioner David Jamieson branding it a “national emergency”.

Hazrat Umar, 17, was killed in Bordesley Green on Monday; Abdullah Muhammad, 16, died in Small Heath the previous week, and seven days earlier Sidali Mohamed, 16, was stabbed outside a college in Highgate.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan tweeted on Saturday of his upset at the death of Jodie.

He added: “Devastated by the fatal stabbing of a 17-year-old girl in Havering. My thoughts are with her loved ones.

“It fills me with anger that violent criminals are targeting young Londoners with their whole lives before them. I encourage anyone with information to contact the police.”

Khan set up a violent crime reduction unit last year in a bid to prevent the spread of violent crime in London.

The Home Office said it set out a range of actions to tackle violent crime in October including a £200 million youth endowment fund; consulting on a on new legal duty to underpin a public health approach to tackling serious violence, and an independent review of drug misuse.

It said an extra £970 million in police funding is proposed in the funding settlement for 2019-20 and added that the offensive weapons bill currently before Parliament will introduce new offences to tackle knife crime and acid attacks.

The Home Office also said the serious violence taskforce, chaired by the Home Secretary and including other ministers, MPs, police leaders and the London Mayor, meets regularly to oversee and drive delivery of the serious violence strategy.

The strategy, published last year, focuses on steering young people away from a life of crime, while continuing to promote a strong law enforcement response, it added.

This includes the £22 million early intervention youth fund a new £3.6 million National Police Chiefs Council/National Crime Agency led National County Lines Coordination Centre on 21 September 2018.

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